2). Hppleton anfc Company's publications. 



Spanish Literature. 



By James Fitz Maurice-Kelly, Member of the Spanish Academy. A new volume in the 

 Literatures of the World Series, edited by Edmund Gosse. Uniform with " Italian Litera- 

 ture," " Ancient Greek Literature," " French Literature," and "Modern English Literature." 

 i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 

 "This is an excellent and model handbook. It is treated with perspective and proportion ; it is comprehen- 

 sive, clear, concise, yet not dry as dust ; the judgments are judicial, impartial, and well on the hither side of 

 exaggeration ; the style is good, lucid, and interesting. It is a work well done by one who has a thorough grip 

 of his subject, and has thought out its essentials before he set pen to paper." — London Academy. 



The Scientific Memoirs of Thomas Henry Huxley. 



Edited by Prof. Michael Foster, M.A., M. D., F. R. S., and by Prof. E. Ray Lankester, M. A., 



LL. D., F. R. S. In four volumes. Volume I, with 32 plates and a Photogravure Portrait, 



$7.50 net. (Edition limited to 100 sets.) Volume II ready immediately. 



" It was a true insight which led Professors Foster and Ray Lankester, the editors of these memoirs, to 



undertake the work which, begun in this large volume of over six hundred pages, is expected to extend to four 



volumes in all. No fitter memorial to Huxley could be imagined, no more appropriate attempt to uncover to 



general view the broad foundations upon which his claim to fame and reputation must rest in the future could 



be conceived, than to publish in collective form the papers which, for well-nigh half a century of scientific 



activity, he contributed to scientific societies and scientific periodicals. . . . These memoirs have left us with a 



very decided impression : we have been introduced, as it were, afresh to Huxley the specialist, Fellow of the 



Royal Society at twenty-six, its Royal Medallist at twenty-seven, a mind-producing work of the first order, a 



figure which looms large and impressive on the imagination." — London Spectator. 



Philip's Experiments; or, Physical Science at Home. 



By Prof. John Trowbridge, of Harvard University, author of " What is Electricity?" Illus- 

 trated. i2mo. Cloth, $1. 00. 

 The writer's object in this book is to show that a little of the time that a youth has outside of the schoolroom 

 may, if devoted to simple investigations under proper guidance, produce important and far-reaching results of 

 permanent educational value. Interest in Nature and science may be aroused in walks with an interesting 

 companion. " Philip's Experiments" will show how much a parent can accomplish in the formation of a son's 

 tastes with a little wisely directed effort. 



The Earth and Sky. 



By Edward S. Holden. Illustrated. Appletons' Home-Reading Books. 121110. Boards, 

 28 cents net. 



This book is the first of a series of three volumes, treating of the leading phases of astronomical knowledge 

 and designed for use as a reading book in the school as well as in the home. It is written in a simple, conversa- 

 tional style to show first that the earth is not flat, but that it is an immense glebe, and next its situation in space. 

 The sun and moon are next treated, and finally the stars in their courses. The young child is shown how he 

 can learn things for himself, and nothing is presented too difficult for him to comprehend. 



A Herald of the West. 



A Romance of 1811-1815. By J. A. Altsheler, author of "A Soldier of Manhattan" and 

 " The Sun of Saratoga." i2mo. Cloth, $1.50. 



"A portion of our history that has not before been successfully embodied in fiction. . . . Extremely well writ- 

 ten, condensed, vivid, picturesque, and there is continual action. ... A rattling good story, and unrivaled in 

 fiction for its presentation of the American feeling toward England during our second conflict."— Boston Herald. 



The Story of the Mind. 



By Prof. James Mark Baldwin, of Princeton University. Library of Useful Stories. i6mo. 

 Illustrated. Cloth, 40 cents. 



" A volume that has long been needed, and the subject has here been treated by a master hand. It is one of 

 the best introductions to the subject of psychology with which we are acquainted. The little volume is not only a 

 lucid and forcible elementary study, but the practical lessons it tells or implies are of the utmost value. . . . We 

 strongly recommend the book to serious readers, especially to those who have hitherto avoided books on psy- 

 chology as being too abstruse and dry." — Boston Saturday Evening Gazette. 



The American Revolution, 1763-1783. 



Being the Chapters and Passages relating to America from the author's " History of England in 

 the Eighteenth Century." By William Edward Hartpole LECKY, M. P., author of " The 

 History of European Morals," " Democracy and Liberty," " Rationalism in Europe," etc. Ar- 

 ranged and edited, with Historical and Biographical Notes, by James Albert Woodburn, Professor 

 of American History and Politics in Indiana University. i2mo. Cloth, $1.25. 

 " This volume relates to the English colonies in America, and the causes and progress of the American 

 Revolution. The chapter on ' Ametica, 176.^-1776,' which is taken entire, contains Mr. Leckv's notable account 

 of the colonial controversy with the mother country, which caused the dismemberment of the British Empire, 

 and made two nations of the English race. To this chapter has been added Mr. Lecky's discussions of the 

 progress of our Revolutionary War and of the peace negotiations which closed that war — the most important 

 chapter in the history of American diplomacy. It is believed that this material, gathered from a voluminous 

 work, constitutes a volume of unity and of logical and historical sequence, and one of great value as a contribu- 

 tion to American history."— From the Preface. 



